Support an Independent Journalism Collective in LatinAmerica

MX$ 66,580

75

backers

***Vá para baixo pra versão portugues***

NOTE: The amounts are in mexican pesos MX$100 = USD $6.00→ →

NOTA: Os valores de doação estão em pesos mexicanos. Mx$100=R$20→→

(ENG)For the past four years, Avispa Midia has provided in-depth, critical coverage of events throughout Latin America, from risky situations like the 2016 teachers’ protests in Nochixtlan, Oaxaca, where federal police assassinated 8 people, to catastrophes like the major earthquakes that devastated Mexico in September 2017. We have also worked throughout Central America and Brazil to investigate how military and police forces collude with organized crime to control populations and protect corporate interests.

(ENG)Recently, Avispa was recognized by the Index on Censorship’s 2018 Freedom of Expression Awards under the category of high-impact journalism. Our independent coverage has gained a reputation for investigating topics that large media outlets have forgotten or simply ignore because it doesn’t help their ratings. We have done this work by making the best of limited resources and materials: to date we don’t have a stable funding source and have managed to raise small amounts through fund-raising events and the sale of photographs and t-shirts.

(ENG)In 2017 alone, Avispa completed 18 investigative project and dozens of local and international reports. We produced two documentaries and numerous photo essays. We also facilitated community mapping workshops, discussion panels, screenings and conferences during visits to cities as well as Indigenous and rural communities. The majority of this work has developed in response to the needs of the communities and organizations that invited us to document their struggles and create communication tools that support their resistance movements.

(ENG)In its fourth year, Avispa Midia is receiving more invitations than ever, and our needs are also growing. For 2018 we have a full agenda of investigation topics and workshops. However, the project’s budget is not enough to cover everything, including visits to communities in resistance that have asked for our support. We also urgently need to fix and replace basic equipment, including an audio recorder, microphone, memory cards, batteries, external hard drives, a video camera, a tripod, and a computer for editing photo and video.

(ENG)It is for this reason that we are asking for your solidarity. Because autonomous and critical projects like Avispa Midia would not be able to sustain their work without the support of individuals and collectives that are conscious of the urgent need to create alternatives. Those who demonstrate support take part not only in projects like Avispa Midia but also in the resistance movements of Indigenous peoples and communities that are building and rebuilding just alternatives every day.

(ENG)In 2018, Avispa plans to analyze and document: the proliferation of Special Economic Zones in Mexico and Central America; the impacts of clean energy production; militarization and counterinsurgency in Indigenous communities; mining in Southern Mexico; climate change and the water market. We also plan to visit new spaces so as to document the experiences and alternatives of resistance movements led by women—above all Indigenous and campesina women. We plan to produce 1-2 investigations per month.

(ENG)Form part of Avispa's investigative journalism community workshops, and documentaries whose goal is to serve peoples in resistance throughout Latin America. This work will only be possible trough your contribution, which joins the diverse efforts of collectives, organizations, and Indigenous and campesino peoples to create new communication strategies focused on building another possible world.

(ENG)In 2017, the Avispa Midia team traveled to seven countries – Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama – with the aim of understanding and documenting the new wave of megaprojects that are affecting campesino and Indigenous territories. Throughout our journey we reflected on social and environmental problems with grassroots movements and organizations as well as campesino and Indigneous land defenders. Through debates and the presentation of maps and documentaries, we sought to create spaces for community members to identify with the experiences of peoples from other countries, so as to rethink the problem of dispossession from a Latin American perspective.